Shape characteristics of Whip Butterfly Fish
Whip Butterfly Fish (confirmed introduction)

Whip Butterfly Fish belongs to marine fish , it is not difficult to raise artificially. The nature of whip butterfly fish is relatively gentle, so when raising whip butterfly fish, you can also raise some other guinea fish. So what are the shape characteristics of the whip butterfly fish?

The saddle-spotted butterfly fish has a white body with black straight stripes all over its body. The back half is yellow. There is a black spot where the tail meets the body. There are two large black patterns on the body. There are also black spots on the eyes. The pattern passes through. However, the black spots are not as dark as those of the Indian three-room butterfly.

The fourth ray of the dorsal fin of the whip butterfly fish extends filamentously. There is a large oval blue-black spot on the back and upper part of the body. The lower edge of the spot is a wide white edge and the rear edge is orange-red. There are 6-7 blue vertical stripes on the side of the body. Body length 20 cm.

The body of the whip butterfly fish is flattened on the side, and the snout is over. The body of the fish is light yellow-green, with large black spots on the back, and a wide white edge on the lower edge of the black spots. It is yellow from the snout to the abdomen. The juvenile stage has black eyes and false eye spots on the tail peduncle.

The body of the whip butterfly fish is tall and oval; the surface above the head is straight. Snout pointed and extending beyond, but not extending into a tube. The anterior nostril has a nasal valve. The edge of the anterior operculum is finely serrated; the opercular membrane runs through the isthmus. The teeth of the two jaws are finely pointed and densely arranged, the maxillary teeth have 6-8 rows, and the mandibular teeth have about 7-10 rows. There are huge scales in the body integument; the lateral line rises sharply to below the IX-X spine of the dorsal fin and then drops below the base end of the dorsal fin. Dorsal fin simple, hard spines XII-XIV, soft rays 21-24 (often XIII, 23-24); anal fin hard spines III, soft rays 20-22 (often 21). The front part of the body is grayish brown and the back part is yellow; the lower part of the body has 6-7 rows of longitudinal brown stripes; there is a large oval black spot on the back and upper part of the body, covering most of the dorsal fin, and there is also a wide white spot on the lower edge of the body. edge. Young fish have black eye spots, which gradually disappear as they grow, leaving only some traces on the eyes; young fish also have a disguised eye spot on the caudal peduncle, but it completely disappears as they grow. The terminal edge of the dorsal fin extends like a silk, and both the tail fin and the caudal fin have orange edges; the anal fin is white with orange edges and yellow edges; the left and right sides of the caudal fin and the terminal end have yellow to orange edges.


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